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SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today, Dev
Bootcamp, the original immersive coding bootcamp, and Lesbians
Who Tech, a community of queer women in and around tech, joined
forces to provide scholarships for LGBTQ women to learn to code and open
doors to long-term careers in the technology industry.

With the announcement, Dev Bootcamp becomes the marquee partner for
Lesbians Who Tech’s Kickstarter
campaign seeking to raise $100,000 for the Edie Windsor Coding
Scholarship Fund launched in mid-April. Regardless of the amount raised
on Kickstarter, Dev Bootcamp commits to matching the fundraising end
goal of $100,000. Named after a pioneer for both women in tech and gay
rights, the Edie Windsor Scholarship Fund pays tribute to the first
woman who achieved the highest technical position, senior systems
programmer, at IBM in 1968 and won her court case ruling anti-same sex
marriage laws unconstitutional in 2013.

“It is important for us, as LGBTQ women, to protect our history and
secure our future. By naming this scholarship after Edie, we're doing
just that,” said Leanne Pittsford, founder and CEO of Lesbians Who Tech.
“We honor Edie with this fund and help clear the path for a future
generation of women, specifically queer women coders, who are looking to
make an impact on the quality of tech products and platforms with their
diversity of perspectives.”

The $100,000 raised for the scholarship fund will be used to send 10+
LGBTQ women to a coding school of their choice and will pay for 50
percent of each scholarship recipient’s tuition. Dev Bootcamp’s
Kickstarter donation match will double the number of women who receive a
bootcamp education by directly covering 50 percent of the tuition for an
additional 10+ scholars to attend any of Dev Bootcamp’s campuses across
the country. Dev Bootcamp is currently enrolling students in San
Francisco, Chicago, New York, San Diego, Seattle, Austin and Washington,
D.C.

“It is important for our organization to stand with Lesbians Who Tech
and others like it in order to take actionable steps toward a more
inclusive technology culture from Silicon Valley to Austin, D.C., New
York and around the world,” said LaTeesha Thomas, director of diversity
at Dev Bootcamp. “Matching the Kickstarter campaign donations is one
more step we can take toward infusing diversity into the tech workforce
from the ground up to supplement the top-down actions many big name tech
companies are taking.”

Lesbians Who Tech is managing the application process and selection of
scholarship recipients for the money raised via the Kickstarter campaign
as well as the Dev Bootcamp $100,000 matching contribution. Eligibility
for the Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship is open to anyone who identifies
as a woman and a member of the LGBTQ community. Applications
open today, May 4, and close on June 1, 2016. Enrollment dates for the
selected scholars will depend on acceptance into the Dev Bootcamp
program and other selected bootcamps.

“This collaboration between Lesbians Who Tech and Dev Bootcamp is so
important to me because I know first-hand the opportunities that a
quality coding education can provide,” said Kara Carrell, Technical
Project Manager at LimeRed Studio and Dev Bootcamp graduate. “I donated
to the Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship Kickstarter campaign to help
lower the barrier to entry for bootcamps and the broader tech industry
and allow other queer women to join me in creating a more inclusive,
multi-faceted community of techies and creators.”

This commitment from Dev Bootcamp builds on the momentum created by the
company’s recent diversity initiatives. Last month, it announced
full-tuition scholarships for 20 people from underrepresented
communities to attend its San Francisco program in conjunction with a
donation from Facebook.
A year ago, the company awarded 34 diversity scholarships in conjunction
with #YesWeCode and the White House TechHire initiative. Dev Bootcamp
then re-partnered
with the #YesWeCode Coding Corps apprenticeship program to offer
scholarships to 10 Bay Area residents from underrepresented groups.

The Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship Fund formalizes a scholarship
program that Lesbians Who Tech started in 2015. The previous program
committed $40,000 of a
donation from venture capitalist Marc Andreessen and philanthropist
Laura Arrillaga-Andreessen to send six queer women of color to learn how
to code. The scholars are currently enrolled or preparing to start
classes at Dev Bootcamp, Hackbright Academy, Fullstack Academy, and
General Assembly.

According to the most recent data from the National
Center for Women & Information Technology, women represented
only 25 percent of the computing workforce in 2015. Upon further
dissection of that number, women of color represented less than 10
percent - five percent Asian, three percent black and one percent
Hispanic - and that number only goes down for women who identify as part
of the LGBTQ community. In 2015, Dev Bootcamp reported nearly 33 percent
women, trans and non-binary students.

About Lesbians Who TechLesbians Who
Tech is a global community of over 15,000 LGBTQ women in technology and
our allies in over 35 cities and growing. Our mission is to create
community, increase visibility and advocate for a more inclusive
technology industry. Founded in 2012, Lesbians Who Tech hosts annual New
York and San Francisco Summits, expanding globally in 2015 with Summits
in Berlin, Brazil and Israel, growing year-over-year. Lesbians Who Tech
has been called the “Most Diverse Technology Conference” for its focus
on increasing the participation and visibility of women, LGBTQ women and
LGBTQ women of color in tech. This year, Lesbians Who Tech launched a
nonprofit arm that will fund two programs in 2016: a one-day mentorship
and job shadowing program called “Bring a Lesbian to Work Day" and the
Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship Fund for LGBTQ women. For more
information about the organization and upcoming events, visit lesbianswhotech.org.

About Dev BootcampDev Bootcamp
pioneered the short-term, immersive developer bootcamp, a model that
transforms beginners into highly employable web developers in a matter
of months. The 18-week curriculum, and one week of career training,
teaches the technical skills people need to work as a web developer, but
also the interpersonal skills that are critical to working in dynamic,
cross-functional engineering teams. With more than 2,100 graduates to
date, and locations open in San Francisco, Chicago, New York City, San
Diego, Seattle, Austin and soon Washington, D.C., Dev Bootcamp continues
to lead the industry through innovation and expansion. Dev Bootcamp is
owned by Kaplan, Inc. For more information, visit devbootcamp.com.